Congress, the president talked about his signature trade achievement that's now partly in the hands of the Democratic House majority.

Trump touted the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement as a no-brainer compared to the "historic blunder" and "catastrophe known as NAFTA."

But, as agrimarketing.com reports, Democrats have already asked for changes and lawmakers on both sides have suggested there's little hope for approving the new pact while Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada and Mexico remain in place.